Location |
Defendant(s) |
Date of Alleged Crime |
Jefferson
County, AL |
Ronnie & Dale Mahan |
Nov 30, 1983 |
Ronnie and Dale Mahan were convicted of kidnapping and raping 18-year-old
Pamela Pope. Pope identified the brothers from a photo lineup. She said
she got a look at the perpetrators when they lifted their masks. The Mahans
were sentenced to life and 35 years respectively. Ronnie and Dale spent
more than 12 years in prison before DNA tests exonerated them in 1998. (IP1)
(IP2)
(CT) [12/05] |
Los Angeles
County, CA |
James Preston |
Oct 18, 1924 |
James W. Preston was convicted of robbing
a Los Angeles widow and shooting her when she tried to escape. The victim,
Mrs. Dick R. Parsons lived at 906 W. 50th St. The perpetrator had entered
through a first floor window, and on the dust of the screen, fingerprints
were found. Preston was arrested on a minor charge a few days after the
crime. His fingerprints were compared with those found on the screen, but
did not match. For some reason, however, the Los Angeles newspapers carried
stories stating that Preston had been identified as Mrs. Parsons' assailant
through the fingerprints. The source of this misinformation could not be
determined.
Read More
by Clicking Here
|
Santa Clara County, CA |
Michael Hutchinson |
Oct 25, 1998 (Milpitas) |
Michael Hutchinson was convicted of the
robbery of a Milpitas 7-Eleven store. After the robbery, the clerk who was
on duty told the store manager that his friend had robbed the store. With a
local police officer, the store manager reviewed a video/audio surveillance tape of the
robbery. The manager expressed surprise that the robber appeared to be
Michael Hutchinson. The officer agreed that the robber appeared to be
Hutchinson. Both had known Hutchinson since childhood. The robber wore a
stocking mask, so it is not clear what basis the two men used to recognize
him. The clerk identified Hutchinson in a photo lineup and at trial. At
trial, the manager and the officer identified Hutchinson from the
surveillance tape, although the officer expressed uncertainty. Hutchinson
was sentenced to 11 years in prison.
Hutchinson's
appeals attorney thought the robber on the surveillance tape was too small
to be Hutchinson. In 2001, he sought funds from an appeals court to
scientifically analyze the tape but was denied. However, the San Jose
Mercury News had the tape analyzed and the analyst concluded that the actual
robber is several inches shorter than Hutchinson. A frame photo of the
robber leaving the store with a height overlay added to the door clearly
shows that the robber could not be more than 5'8" tall.
He could not be Hutchinson
as Hutchinson is 6' tall.
In 2006, a
federal court overturned Hutchinson's conviction. The prosecution
planned to retry him using his apparently hostile ex-wife as a identification
witness. Rather than face retrial, in 2007 Hutchinson pleaded to
a time-served deal. (Tainted
Trials (with robber photo)) (Mercury
News) [1/08] |
St. Clair County,
IL |
Floyd Flood |
Aug 23, 1924 (Freeburg) |
Floyd
Flood was
convicted of robbing the First National Bank in Freeburg, IL. Two female
bank employees identified him as one of the six men who robbed the bank.
Along with Flood, two of the actual robbers were convicted. Following
their conviction, the two confessed their part in the robbery, but stated
that Flood was not involved and that they did not even know him. Two
more of the actual robbers were then caught. They confessed and named
the remaining two men involved, neither of whom were Flood. The bank
employees who identified Flood admitted they could be mistaken, and a pardon
application was made for him. However, the Bankers Association
opposed the pardon until every one of the six robbers were caught and
convicted. Eventually this demand was met. Illinois Governor
Small pardoned Flood in Jan. 1926. (CTI) [4/08] |
Winnebago
County, IL |
Henry Olson |
Sept 6, 1927 (Rockford) |
Henry Olson was convicted of the
murder of gas station attendant Floyd Stotler. The murder occurred during
an attempted robbery of the Hart Oil Station at the corner of Broadway and
Kishwaukee Streets in Rockford, Illinois. Floyd's father, Orville, was the
only eyewitness. Despite the fact that the two perpetrators wore masks,
Orville positively identified Olson as the bandit who shot his son. This
identification was the only evidence connecting Olson to the murder.
At trial, Olson
presented twelve alibi witnesses. While most of these were family members
and not every witness claimed to have seen Olson at the exact time of the
crime, still the alibi was quite credible. Nevertheless, six of twelve
jurors favored convicting Olson, resulting in a mistrial. On retrial, with
much the same evidence, Olson was convicted.
Despite the
verdict, the judge, evidencing his doubt of Olson's guilt, allowed him to
remain free on $10,000 bond, pending appeal. Soon afterwards, Olson and his
wife disappeared from the community. They had driven to Chicago and
telegraphed family members to come for their car. A nationwide search for
the pair proved unsuccessful. According to many, Olson's flight was
considered an admission of guilt, and there were rumors that Olson's wife
was the second bandit in the gas station holdup.
Meanwhile,
Olson's attorney continued his efforts to clear his client. He got a lead
from a physician, who reported that a family maidservant had stated that
Olson was not guilty. When police questioned her, she denied making the
statement. Later, after she was taken in for further questioning, she
admitted making the statement and said her boyfriend, Maurice Mahan, had
boasted to her that he and his chum, George Bliss, had held up the gas
station, and that Bliss had done the shooting. When Mahan and Bliss were
picked up, they were questioned separately and each eventually confessed,
giving identical details. They both pleaded guilty to the crime.
Efforts were
made to locate Olson and his wife through press and radio to give them the
good news, with a message to return home. After some weeks Olson, then in
New Orleans, saw a notice in a newspaper. After contacting his attorney to
confirm the news was true, Olson and his wife returned to Rockford. Olson
faced a third trial, but was acquitted in Mar. 1928. (CTI)
[11/07] |
St. Tammany
Parish, LA |
Dennis Brown |
Sept 1984 (Covington) |
In Sept. 1984,
a woman was raped in Covington, LA. Dennis Brown was not even a suspect in the
rape, but he had unwisely volunteered to serve as a filler in a police
lineup. The victim had only seen the eyes of her masked assailant, but she
identified Brown in the lineup and at trial. On the basis of this identification,
Brown was prosecuted and convicted. He served 19 years of a life sentence
before DNA tests exonerated him in 2004. (IP)
(IPNO) |
Anne Arundel
County, MD |
Guy Gordon Marsh |
June 28, 1971 (Glen Burnie) |
Guy Gordon
Marsh was
convicted of murdering Charles Erdman, a customer inside a Glen Burnie
7-Eleven on Crain Highway near Aquahart Road. The victim had tried to stop
a robbery that was in progress. Linda Packech, a heroin addict and the main
witness against Marsh at trial, said she saw Marsh come out of the store and
pull his mask up. In 1987, Packech admitted she lied. She was in jail at
the time she claimed to have seen Marsh. She told a reporter and a
prosecutor that she had been pressured to finger Marsh by a county police
detective who was convinced Marsh was guilty. Marsh was released after 14
years of imprisonment and Packech was convicted of perjury.
(Annapolis
Capital) [1/07] |
Suffolk
County, MA |
Marlon Passley |
Aug 11, 1995 |
Marlon
Passley was
convicted of murder and assault. He allegedly was a helmeted
motorcycle passenger who fired on a group of six youths, killing Tennyson
Drakes, and seriously wounding two others. Passley was identified by
four of the victims in court. Passley was cleared in 2000 after the
real perpetrator was identified and indicted. (CIPM) (JD04)
[10/05] |
New York
County, NY |
Pezzulich & Sgelirrach |
Mar 22, 1919 |
Frank Pezzulich and Frank
Sgelirrach were convicted of armed robbery charges. On Mar. 22, 1919, seven
pistol-wielding masked men robbed a rooming house at 36 Beach St. occupied
by nine Croatians. The victims were robbed of $1728, $85, $13, and $15.
One victim, Mike Zic, followed a group of robbers that went towards Varick
St. He caught one of the robbers, Frank Strolich, and held him for police.
Strolich denied his participation in the robbery and gave his address as 408
W. 24th St. A detective went to the address, a rooming house, along with
Frank Zic, the heaviest loser in the robbery. There they met two Austrians,
Frank Pezzulich and Frank Sgelirrach. Zic identified both as robbers.
During the robbery two robbers' masks had allegedly slipped, allowing them
to be identified. Both Austrians admitted knowing Strolich, but denied
being robbers.
Read More by
Clicking Here
|
Lee
County, NC |
Steve Snipes |
Feb 13, 1998 |
Steve E. Snipes was convicted of the armed robbery of Thomas Superette, a convenience store
near Sanford. After the robbery, two of the store clerks identified
the robber as Steve Snipes, a neighborhood man and regular customer of the
store. The robber wore a ski mask, and the clerks were not even sure
of his race. They said the robber sounded like Snipes would have
sounded if he had tried to change his voice. They also said the
robber's clothing looked like clothes Snipes sometimes wore.
Police arrested Snipes shortly
afterwards. They did not recover the stolen bank bag, money, weapon,
or a jacket like the one the robber was wearing 15 minutes earlier.
Snipes also had an alibi. However the clerks' testimony was sufficient
to convict. Snipes' trial attorney, Andre Barrett, was
subsequently disbarred after allegations of misappropriating $800,000 in
client funds. The trial prosecutor, Bill Huggins, was accused of
trying to get his girlfriend to kill his wife. A plea bargain sent him to
prison for obstruction of justice and embezzlement.
Since Snipes' imprisonment,
a witness had come forward who testified that another
man, Terrance Wyatt, was the robber. Wyatt was caught committing an identical robbery
while Snipes was in prison. In 2007, after Snipes served over 5
years of imprisonment, NC Governor Easley pardoned him. (News
& Observer) (AP) [4/08] |
Allegheny
County, PA |
Drew Whitley |
Aug 17, 1988 (Duquesne) |
Andrew Whitley
was convicted of murdering Noreen Malloy, 22, a night manager at a
McDonald's restaurant near Kennywood Park. Another employee who was
Whitley's neighbor recognized the man as Whitley. The witness admitted that
he could not see the perpetrator's face clearly as he was wearing a nylon
mask, but he recognized Whitley by his voice, the shape of his head, and the
way that he walked. A third employee identified Whitley in court. In
addition, a death row inmate testified at trial that Whitley confessed to
him in prison. Whitley's conviction was overturned in 2006 after DNA tests
on hairs left in the killer's discarded mask showed that they did not belong
to Whitley. (Post-Gazette)
(IP) (PPU) [9/06] |
Philadelphia County, PA |
Lex Street Innocents |
Dec 28, 2000 |
On Dec. 28, 2000, four men clad
in black ski masks entered a row house at 816 N. Lex St. and forced its ten
inhabitants to lay face down on the floor of the home. The men then
released a spray of gunfire that killed seven, ages 15 to 54, and injured
three. The killings, the deadliest mass murder in Philadelphia history,
became known as the Lex Street Massacre. Police arrested Jermel Lewis, 25,
Hezekiah Thomas, 25, Sacon Youk, 22, and Quiante Perrin, 21, in connection
to the killings. Following his arrest Lewis confessed to the crime due to
“a combination of misinformation [and] coercion.” Lewis may also have been
on drugs that day, making him more vulnerable.
Yvette Long, a
surviving victim, initially told police she could not identify any of the
assailants. However, after sessions with a psychiatrist, she testified that
she recovered her memory of the night and named Youk and Perrin as shooters
and identified Thomas by a nickname. Another man, Shihean Black, repeatedly
confessed to the crime, but police dismissed his confessions. Originally
police believed that the murders were committed as part of a dispute over
drug territory. However, Black's story was that a drug dealer who lived at
the house had ruined the clutch on Black's car, and that the murders were
committed in retaliation. Another individual corroborated Black's story,
and charges were dropped against the four men after they spent 18 months in
prison. The four men later sued the city and won a $1.9 million settlement
for wrongful incarceration. Another four men, including Black, later
pleaded guilty to the homicides. A book was written about the case
entitled The Lex Street Massacre by Antonne M. Jones. [7/05] |
Dallas County,
TX |
Steven Phillips |
1982 |
Steven Charles Phillips was convicted of raping
a woman and sexually assaulting two others during a burglary. The
assailant's face was partially covered during the attacks. However, the
rape victim identified Phillips and spoke at length about her assailant's
“striking blue eyes.” Other women also told authorities that they
remembered the assailant's blue eyes. However, Phillips' eyes are green.
Phillips also pleaded guilty to eight additional charges for sex crimes that
police said were committed by the same man who committed the rape. A
defense attorney said that after being convicted of the initial charges,
Phillips gave up and pleaded to the additional charges.
In 2007, DNA
evidence has cleared him of the charges for which he was tried, making him
the 14th person in Dallas County to be exonerated by DNA testing. A court
will have to decide if the same evidence also clears him of the other
charges that he pleaded to. (DMN) [10/07] |
Navarro
County, TX |
Shannon & Clements |
Mar 15, 1925 (Currie) |
Earl Shannon and H. A. Clements
were convicted of the robbery of a Currie grocery store. Two armed men had
robbed the store, which was owned by two partners, Phipps and English.
English had been present during the robbery, but Phipps had not. English
identified one of the masked and hatted robbers as Clements. Clements ran a
shop about two miles away with his partner Shannon. English later
identified the robbers' lookout man as Shannon after Phipps found
circumstantial evidence that implicated Shannon.
Just before
Shannon's trial, Phipps told Shannon's attorney that English could not
identify any of the persons who robbed the store except Clements. The trial
judge would not permit Shannon's attorney to testify to Phipps's statement.
Shannon's conviction was later overturned for that reason. He was never
retried.
While in
prison, Clements met another inmate, Blackie Davis, who confessed to the
grocery store robbery and signed a deposition to that effect. The Governor
was unconvinced by Davis's admission, and refused to pardon Clements.
However, a sixty-day furlough was granted, to enable Clements to locate the
accomplices implicated by Davis's confession. On his furlough, Clements
found one of the accomplices. Backed by an application endorsed by the
district judge, the prosecutor, and all the jurors, the Texas Governor
pardoned Clements in May 1929. (CTI)
[11/07] |
City of
Norfolk, VA |
Willie Davidson |
Nov 27, 1980 |
Willie Davidson was convicted of raping,
sodomizing, and robbing a 66-year-old woman. The assailant had worn a
stocking mask over his face, a cap, gloves, and a coat. The victim had
known Davidson and his family most of her life. Davidson and his family had
moved away years before, but they had stopped to visit the victim the day
before the attack. Police put a stocking on Davidson's head and asked the
victim if he looked like her attacker. She responded affirmatively.
Davidson said that he was at home sleeping while the crime was being
committed. His family members supported his alibi at trial. Davidson
served almost 13 years of imprisonment.
A crime lab
analyst, Mary Jane Burton, had, against the rules, saved specimens of
biological evidence of the cases she worked on. Evidence saved by Burton
had already helped exonerate three convicts. In 2004, DNA tests were
ordered on a random 10% of her approximately 310 specimens, resulting in the
exonerations of Davidson and Phillip Leon Thurman. Gov. Warner pardoned
both in Dec. 2005. (IP)
[12/05] |
City of
Richmond, VA |
Michael McAlister |
Feb 23, 1986 |
Michael
McAlister was
convicted of attempted rape. The victim said
a masked man wearing a red and white plaid shirt attacked her, and McAlister
voluntarily put on a red plaid shirt when police asked him to before taking
his photo. The victim was later shown a photo spread and identified
McAlister, the only man in the photo spread wearing a red shirt. The chief
investigator and the trial prosecutor went to McAlister's parole hearing in
1993 and said, “We just felt that McAlister was not the person and that
there was a high probability [someone else] could have committed the
offense.” Parole was denied in 1993 and in later years, and as of 2002,
McAlister was waiting for his mandatory 2004 release. (Times-Dispatch)
[11/05] |
Yakima County,
WA |
Ted Bradford |
Fall 1995 |
Ted L.
Bradford was
convicted of rape after police contended he confessed following an 8-hour
interrogation. The perpetrator had worn a nylon stocking over his head and
had covered his victim's face with a mask. The victim had described the
perpetrator as 6' tall while Bradford is 5'7". In the confession, Bradford
said no children were present in the victim's home, when in fact the
victim's infant child wailed throughout the attack. Bradford served a
9-year prison sentence, but did not stop professing his innocence. In 2007,
the DNA profile of another unknown man was found from skin cells left on the
mask. A court overturned Bradford's conviction, making Bradford the first
person in Washington State whose conviction was overturned because of DNA
evidence. The state plans to retry him. According to a prosecutor, even
though Bradford faces no additional prison time, it is important to make him
register as a sex offender. Bradford also faces a $600,000 judgment owed to
the victim and her husband, who sued him in 1996. (Seattle
Times) [10/07] |
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